Asia’s digital millennials: Mobile, social and borderless

The world’s millennial generation is a major driving force behind the digital economy. Their consumption patterns and preferences underpin the growth of new interconnecting ecosystems of recreation and commerce. Asia’s digital millennials: Mobile, social and borderless, an Economist Intelligence Unit report commissioned by the Singapore Economic Development Board, examines the ways in which the consumer behaviour and digital habits of millennials in Asia converge or diverge from those in other parts of the world.

Eastern promise: Young philanthropists in Asia

Unable to afford next month’s rent, Kathy Gong was aghast when her boyfriend donated Rmb100 (US$15) each week to his church in Beijing. “Even though rationally I understood the need to be kind, when it came to real actions it was hard,” she recalls. “So that year I set a goal to train myself to let go.” Life is vastly different today for the 30-year-old entrepreneur who runs investment and business advisory companies with a technology start-up in the works. But she has not forgotten that earlier lesson: Ms Gong donates 10% of her personal dividends each year.

Millennials train in banking to succeed in tech

Are finance jobs becoming a conveyor belt for millennials wishing to go into tech startups? Banks invest heavily in training to create well-rounded employees with high-stamina and perfected soft skills.

Teaching teachers

One of India’s great economic advantages is the relative youth of its population. By 2020 it will become the world’s youngest country, with 64% of its people at working age. To make the most of this democratic dividend, India’s children need to be educated.

Higher education – What’s it worth?

As university graduates box up their caps and gowns for the summer and embark on the world of work, they might be surprised to learn that senior executives value a diploma far less than skills or contacts.

The Real Apprentice

We visited a local charity in east London to see how they are trying to kick-start individual careers, one young person at a time

Why running 5k can help young people get a job

George Osborne might have looked pleased in his latest budget address, as he reported that the UK’s economy is “recovering faster than forecast”. But for some it is a jobless recovery: nearly one-in-five young people (aged between 16-24) in the UK are still unemployed.

Generation Unemployed

Students discuss their prospects for getting a job after graduation, in a short film about youth employment in the UK

The ‘capital-lite’ generation

The real issues affecting SME growth and the wider economy.

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